Author Topic: Does America Know What It's Doing in the Middle East? More U.S. troops and patience won’t fix what ails the region.  (Read 223 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

rangerrebew

  • Guest

Does America Know What It's Doing in the Middle East?
[1]
Main Image

More U.S. troops and patience won’t fix what ails the region.
Christopher A. Preble [2]

The United States has been heavily involved in the greater Middle East, including the Persian Gulf, parts of North Africa, the Horn of Africa and Afghanistan in Central Asia, for over forty-seven years. The U.S. foreign policy establishment seems determined to stay there for at least another half century, despite that fact that our strategic objectives are unclear at best, and our ability to achieve much beyond short-term military successes has proved wanting.

U.S. officials established an active military presence in the Persian Gulf in 1979 following the overthrow of the Shah of Iran, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Subsequently, the worst-case scenarios were averted—the collapse of the House of Saud, a Soviet victory in Afghanistan, and Saddam Hussein in possession of Kuwaiti oil fields. But Americans’ memories are also punctuated by tragedies and setbacks, from the Beirut bombing and the Mogadishu firefight, to the more recent disastrous war in Iraq and the ongoing fight against ISIS. These episodes often overshadow the day-to-day courage and sacrifice, as well as the individual acts of heroism, by the members of the U.S. military tasked with bringing order to a notoriously disordered part of the world.


Source URL (retrieved on October 27, 2016): http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-skeptics/does-america-know-what-its-doing-the-middle-east-18194